Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Advice=Action Engineering
Quote from: tonypep on August 27, 2015, 12:53:39 PMAdvice=Action EngineeringWhat about when the width of the zipper placket is different then the groove cut into the pallet surface? We print on several different blanks of zip hoodies and most of them have different plackets. When we ran into variances like this we could not get perfect prints across the board, the only way we have been able to do that is by building our own pallets with foam.
I think cardboard can work, just not CORRUGATED cardboard. I did some zippered hoodies using mat board; that worked well. The foam roll at Home Depot is probably underlayment for hardwood flooring -- that does sound like a good idea. Comes in 100 square foot rolls. I think you'd need to build up a few layers though -- it's not very thick.
While this is about printing over zippers with an auto, the best method I found for zippered hoodies was a hot split transfer. We had the luxury of both autos and a heat transfer dept capable of almost any transfer. (No number of color limitations, no shrinkage under a flash, no excess spray tack all over the operator, and far faster production times. (PM me if you want to contact this company I used to work with. They do wholesale and the guy is a 30 year vet of the industry.) With a good hot split transfer you can heat transfer right over the zipper and as soon as you remove the paper take a razor blade down the middle to slice the ink. (we never damaged the fabric, its a breeze) Then throw some t-shirt fabric over the print and hit again for 3 seconds to seal the print around the fabric next to the zipper. Easily the highest quality print you can do on a zippered hoody with far less hassle. No need for precision loading the zipper into a channel, the print looks like the hoody was panel printed then sewn up. The t-shirt seal for 3 seconds also imparts a screen printed look. We also used this same method on non zippered hoodies to print over the kangaroo pocket, Inside the hoody, or over shoulder seam. The cost? Far less than tying up the auto and doing a slow load and having a 3-4% reject rate we experienced with direct prints. No matter how well we selected mesh, channel materials, the seams wind up with puddles of ink that gain on the next print. Now discharge? You guys are brave.